Tuesday, May 23, 2017

(Insert Post Title Here)

... mothers that they found who are still looking for their daughters. And
daughters they found who are still looking for their mothers. And they
can’t find the rest of their families. And I think that is what is
making… Europe is getting used to attacks like this Mika. We have to. Because we are never going to totally wipe this out.

Women in Paris have been protesting against ‘no go zones’ where immigrants from Asia and Africa pester and abuse them.

It’s claimed the district of Chapelle-Pajol,
in the north east of the French capital, has become more dangerous for
women as the rate of immigration there grows. Large groups of men are
said to hang around in the streets, sometimes drinking, and often
intimidate women.

One 80-year-old woman from the district has even said she was sexually assaulted walking home one night.

Others have complained about catcalls and verbal abuse, which makes them feel unsafe.

Dozens turned out to protest against the so-called ‘no go zones’ on
Friday. ‘The problems in the area are real,’ Clare Rougy, one of the
demonstrators, told The Local.

She added: ‘It is aggressive and you see men fighting in the streets. Women do not feel safe.’

Another woman, identified as 50-year-old Natalie, told Le Parisien
newspaper: ‘The atmosphere is agonising, to the point of having to
modify our itinerary, our clothes. Some even gave up going out.’

Journalists are already self-censoring in the toxic fallout from the
CBC’s cultural appropriation controversy, University of Toronto Prof.
Dr. Jordan Peterson says.

Peterson, whose fight against mandatory use of genderless pronouns
drew international attention, said the impact of political correctness
on free speech and broader society is profound.

“This is why I’ve been warning about the emergence of such ideas at the university,” Peterson told The Toronto Sun.

“Anybody who thinks these ideas are going to stay in the university, believe me, they’re engaging in wishful thinking.”

People tripping over themselves to prove their social piety have removed themselves from sanity. They are - perhaps not realising it - destroying the culture, leaving only a withered husk of a civilisation that gave everyone people like Shakespeare and Descartes.

Speaking at that year’s CPSA annual meeting, Widdowson
argued that Canada’s land reserve system and the policies that encourage
First Nations to live separately from mainstream society only further
societal dysfunction. Assimilation, she said, would better close the
“development gap” between First Nations and non-indigenous Canadians.
Out came the angry bees. Some members called her talk “hate speech”
worthy of a Criminal Code investigation. One colleague asked if she’d
“like to take it outside.”

To recap, the Calgary Herald reported this week
that Crockatt and others lodged a complaint with Elections Canada
alleging foreign money was donated to third-party organizations and then
used to influence the 2015 election, potentially in contravention of
spending limits.

A total of 114 third parties — people or groups producing election
advertising who are not registered candidates, political parties or
riding associations — were registered with Elections Canada in 2015, up
from 55 in 2011.

According to the complaint, nine of those organizations were funded
at least in part by the New York-based Tides Foundation, which donated a
total of US $1.5 million.

Leadnow — which organized a 2015 anyone-but-Harper strategic voting
campaign which targeted a number of ridings where it considered the
Conservatives vulnerable — is not included on the list of Tides
grantees, but the researcher and writer Vivian Krause has claimed the
organization is funded indirectly through the Sisu Institute Society, a
B.C.-based non-profit which in 2015 received US $795,300, according to
the Tides list.